Has Qwant improved recently?
Has Qwant improved recently?
Has Qwant improved recently?
I'm generally pretty happy with the results in Qwant.
The main thing I miss at this point is really support for !bangs. I use them all the time in DuckDuckGo, to search directly in !scholar or !wiki. Especially in Qwant there are some features missing, so if I for example want to be lazy and use the search bar as a calculator it would be nice to be able to search for !ddg 2+2
.
But that's a minor criticism. For the most part it's a great tool, and I look forward to where they go with their own indexes.
Edit: Also, what's up with this graphic suggesting search engines (if you can call them that) as alternatives to Google Chrome.
In Firefox (other browsers probably as well) you can add custom keywords for searches. For example visit Wikipedia, right click the search field and pick "add keyword" from the menu. As keyword enter "!wiki" or whatever you want and from now on you can just type "!wiki whatever" in the URL bar, no need to take the detour to duckduckgo or some other search engine.
Thanks!! I should have done that ages ago!
@snuggledick
I've shortened it to "w" wikipedia, "g" Google, "d" duckduck, "a" amazon. Also possible with "1","2",...
Typing " w Fediverse" will directly open wikipedia with the article for "Fediverse".
Even when you have abandoned the pages above it will work with your free pages too.
At least desktop Firefox has something similar. Add a bookmark for e.g. "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%s" with the keyword "wiki", then when you type "wiki qwant" into the address bar you'll get the Wikipedia page.
I guess it's easier if you don't have to bookmark each search first, but at least for sites you search often I don't see the need for search engine provided bangs.
edit: As mentioned in another comment, there's a newer way where you just right-click a search box and go to "add keyword".
Why does this sharepic look like the Windows XP installer?
Giving it a try at the moment, doesn't seem too bad
Qwant is great. Very relevant results and not a lot of ads (if any), also private-focused and looks modern.
I tried Ecosia but it wasn't my style (a bit clunky) although their mission is absolutely respectable and worthwhile.
Qwant is is now my main search engine.
It still uses Bing (Microsoft) as its backend, as far as I can tell. I know they want to partner with Ecosia to build something less... USA-dependent but I doubt that will happen overnight.
Huh, I was under the impression that they used their own index. I just did a quick search found a blog post they publisted back in 2023. Here are some relevant excerpts:
At the time of publication, Qwant has in its servers 20 billion indexed web pages
Qwant uses Bing to supplement search results on which we do not have sufficient relevance, and on images where storage capacities are very important. On the rest, the main SEO logics are often the same which explains why you often find the same search results, ranked slightly differently according to the weight given to one or the other.
Of course, that's the company pushing their own preferred narrative, so take it with a grain of salt. But assuming it's not an outright lie, then they're definitely more independent than a lot of other search engines.
Is there a better alternative? Seems like all the alternative search engine rely on Bing or Google anyway
Mojeek is probably the closest thing right now to a normal-looking search engine that is completely independent from Google and Bing. UK based.
They'll start with the German and French web, so if you're searching in English you'll probably have to wait for a while indeed.
I miss the time limits. They only have for last day, week and month. I used a lot the last year or 2 past years (they have custom date table) like Google has, and i go back to DuckDuckGo when i need more recent information but not that limited of one month.
Question for the Ecosia fans in the audience - The "we plant trees with ad revenue" is pretty cool, but they're just a front end for Google (or Bing), yeah?
If so, isn't their whole "we're green" thing misleading? Does it really support EU interests if the backend is still US?
They and Qwant are working together to create their own index
Hey, that's cool! I hope they can keep up the environmental message as they wean off Google/MS. Have they given a timeframe on when they hope to implement it? Seems like a huge task.
Not exactly misleading since they do donate money to plant trees, that's the only claim they make.
Yes, they use Google/Bing frontend, but they have also shown interest in changing by teaming up with Qwant to build an EU-based indexer.
I don't use Ecosia BTW, I use Qwant, but I'm trying to be fair here.
That's a fair point, "misleading" might've been a poor choice of words, but - one of the points on their page reads
"Our solar panels produce enough energy to power your searches twice over, meaning more renewables (and fewer fossil fuels) in the energy grid."
So fair enough, they're offsetting enough to power the connection from their users to Google/MS; I just thought this quote (and their home page in general) glossed over their reliance on those 3rd parties to "do the dirty work", so to speak.
Fhat about Mojeek? Is Mojeek working well?
Any reason I should choose Qwant over Duckduckgo? DDG having bangs and Qwant being not hosted in the US means I see them as about equal. So I won’t bother changing. Anything else I’m missing that Qwant beats DDG in that might make it worth changing.
(I’m definitely gonna change if the index thing works out)
Qwant is building their own index, while DDG is using Bing's (Microsoft) index. I haven't tried Qwant yet, but I guess that would make a noticeable difference.
Yeah. I mentioned that in my comment at the bottom.
Qwant does have something very similar to bangs : https://help.qwant.com/en/docs/qwant-search/searching/comment-utiliser-les-raccourcis-de-recherche-qwick/
I mainly use Startpage, also a european search engine (like qwant it uses microsoft/google search in the backend)
Edit: as nuko pointed out: they are owned by an american company
Startpage is owned by System1, an American Internet advertising company.
Pain didnt knew that, guess I'm switching back to Qwant, thanks for the info!